Post navigation

Its the U.N. International Year of the Cooperative in Western Massachusetts

Did you know that 2012 is the United Nations International Year of the Cooperative?

Well, students in the UMass Sustainable Food and Farming program and many people living in Western Massachusetts sure do! There have been lots of activities, events, and work in my neck of the woods related to the U.N. IYC.

2. The students in my UMass Writing for Sustainability class this spring sponsored a celebratory event in which over 100 students and faculty came to hear presentations by local food cooperatives in the region. Presenting at the celebration were:

This mission-driven business, run by four women, started five years ago as a food delivery service for people who might be customers for community-supported agriculture operations. This crew now says it is ferrying fresh, locally produced food to 300 households in the Valley and south into Connecticut. But this year it is also shaving its prices by 20 percent for low-income buyers and making do with those lower payments.

Though we live in a nation obsessed with appearances and worried about rising obesity, little headway is being made to help people shift from highly processed foods, which often contribute to weight gain, from nameless factories hundreds of miles away to healthier local alternatives. The four co-owners of Valley Green Feast are doing something about that by making fresh produce and other local farm products available at lower cost to people who qualify for benefits through the federal Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program.

4. The University of Massachusetts Department of Economics recently launched a new certificate program in Applied Economic Research on Cooperative Enterprises. This program provides undergraduates with new opportunities for practical, field-based research while also promoting local economic development. Working in collaboration with the Valley Alliance of Worker Cooperatives (VAWC), UMass offers a course of study and internship combined with intensive, supervised summer research in this new program. This program is sponsored by the UMass Cooperative Enterprise Collaborative.

6. Finally, a small group of citizens associated with Transition Amherst is working to create a cooperatively managed store to be called All Things Local. The core idea is to create a resilient local community market by employing a model with lower costs (because of significant contributions from volunteers who care about the mission) and shared-risk (items are sold on consignment, rather than taking on debt to stock inventory).

The store’s design makes it…

Easy for buyers to buy:

Convenient location and hours

Year-round and indoors

Ability to pick-and-choose among many local producers

Single checkout, with all the usual payment options

Easy for producers to sell:

Producers set their own price

90% of the selling price goes back to the producer where it belongs

Fast drop off

Don’t have to be onsite (lower staffing costs)

Online pre-sale bulk orders

Local producers, consumer advocates and organizers are working together to figure out how this concept might work. To follow our progress, see: All Things Local blog.